Of the top ten spots, seven were taken by indies. On the other hand, indies also took the bottom three.
Apple beat on the top and bottom lines. iPhone sales were a bit of a disappointment, but Services had its best quarterly ...
Exclusive: The Apple 3.0 analysts (pros and indies) have placed their bets in advance of today’s June quarter results.
Excerpts from the notes I've seen. More as they come in.
From Akash Sriram and Zaheer Kachwala's "Apple poised for iPhone sales boost on strong Pro demand" posted Wednesday.
From Bloomberg's "Trump Dines With Apple, Salesforce Chiefs at Tokyo Dinner" posted Tuesday.
This quarter, the independents are $2 billion more bullish than the pros.
From a note to J.P. Morgan clients that landed on my desktop Monday.
Philip Elmer-DeWitt has been covering Apple since 1983 — mostly for Time Magazine (28 years), later for Fortune (9 years), ...
"In this note, we attempt to quantify the 5-year (C25-30) earnings potential of Apple based on gaining/losing share in each of its respective product categories, and services segments." ...
The intraday high was $269.08, pennies away from a $4 trillion market cap.